manpagez: man pages & more
man diffstat(1)
Home | html | info | man
diffstat(1)                                                        diffstat(1)




NAME

       diffstat - make histogram from diff-output


SYNOPSIS

       diffstat [options] [file-specifications]


DESCRIPTION

       This  program  reads the output of diff and displays a histogram of the
       insertions, deletions, and modifications per-file.  Diffstat is a  pro-
       gram that is useful for reviewing large, complex patch files.  It reads
       from one or more input files which contain output from diff,  producing
       a histogram of the total lines changed for each file referenced.

       If  the  input  filename ends with .bz2, .gz, .lzma, .z or .Z, diffstat
       will read the uncompressed data via a pipe from the corresponding  pro-
       gram.   It also can infer the compression type from files piped via the
       standard input.

       Diffstat recognizes the most popular types of output from diff:

              unified
                     preferred by the patch utility.

              context
                     best for readability, but not very compact.

              default
                     not good for much, but simple to generate.

       Diffstat detects the lines that are output by diff to tell which  files
       are  compared,  and  then  counts  the markers in the first column that
       denote the type of change (insertion, deletion or modification).  These
       are shown in the histogram as "+", "-" and "!" characters.

       If no filename is given on the command line, diffstat reads the differ-
       ences from the standard input.


OPTIONS

       -b     ignore lines matching "Binary files XXX and YYY differ"  in  the
              diff

       -c     prefix  each  line  of output with "#", making it a comment-line
              for shell scripts.

       -C     add SGR color escape sequences to highlight the histogram.

       -D destination
              specify a directory containing files which can be referred to as
              the result of applying the differences.  diffstat will count the
              lines in the corresponding files (after adjusting the  names  by
              the -p option) to obtain the total number of lines in each file.

              The remainder, after subtracting modified and deleted lines,  is
              shown as "unchanged lines".

       -e file
              redirect standard error to file.

       -f format
              specify the format of the histogram.

              0  for  concise,  which  shows  only the value and a single his-
                 togram code for each of insert (+), delete (-) or modify  (!)

              1  for normal output,

              2  to fill in the histogram with dots,

              4  to print each value with the histogram.

              Any  nonzero  value  gives a histogram.  The dots and individual
              values can be combined, e.g., -f6 gives both.

       -h     prints the usage message and exits.

       -k     suppress the merging of filenames in the report.

       -l     lists only the filenames.  No histogram is generated.

       -m     merge insert/delete counts from each "chunk" of the  patch  file
              to approximate a count of the modified lines.

       -n number
              specify  the  minimum  width  used for filenames.  If you do not
              specify this, diffstat uses the length of the longest  filename,
              after stripping common prefixes.

       -N number
              specify the maximum width used for filenames.  Names longer than
              this limit are truncated on the left.  If  you  do  not  specify
              this, diffstat next checks the -n option.

       -o file
              redirect standard output to file.

       -p number
              override  the logic that strips common pathnames, simulating the
              patch "-p" option.

       -q     suppress the "0 files changed" message for empty diffs.

       -r  code
              provides optional rounding  of  the  data  shown  in  histogram,
              rather than truncating with error adjustments.

              0  is  the  default.   No rounding is performed, but accumulated
                 errors are added to following columns.

              1  rounds the data

              2  rounds the data and adjusts the histogram to ensure  that  it
                 displays something if there are any differences even if those
                 would normally be rounded to zero.

       -R     Assume patch was created with old and new files swapped.

       -s     show only the summary line, e.g., number of insertions and dele-
              tions.

       -S source
              this  is  like the -D option, but specifies a location where the
              original files (before applying differences) can be found.

       -t     overrides the histogram, generates  output  of  comma  separated
              values.

       -u     suppress the sorting of filenames in the report.

       -v     show  progress,  e.g.,  if  the  output is redirected to a file,
              write progress messages to the standard error.

       -V     prints the current version number and exits.

       -w number
              specify the maximum width of the histogram.  The histogram  will
              never be shorter than 10 columns, just in case the filenames get
              too large.


ENVIRONMENT

       Diffstat runs in a portable UNIX(R) environment.

       You can override the compiled-in paths of programs used for decompress-
       ing input files by setting environment variables corresponding to their
       name:

              DIFFSTAT_BZCAT_PATH
              DIFFSTAT_BZIP2_PATH
              DIFFSTAT_COMPRESS_PATH
              DIFFSTAT_GZIP_PATH
              DIFFSTAT_LZCAT_PATH
              DIFFSTAT_PCAT_PATH
              DIFFSTAT_UNCOMPRESS_PATH
              DIFFSTAT_XZ_PATH
              DIFFSTAT_ZCAT_PATH

       However, diffstat assumes that the resulting program uses the same com-
       mand-line options, e.g., "-c" to decompress to the standard output.


FILES

       Diffstat is a single binary module, which uses no auxiliary files.


BUGS

       Diffstat makes a lot of assumptions about the format of a diff file.

       There is no way to obtain a filename from the standard diff between two
       files with no options.  Context diffs work, as well as unified diffs.

       There's no easy way to determine the  degree  of  overlap  between  the
       "before"  and  "after"  displays  of  modified  lines.  diffstat simply
       counts the number of inserted and deleted lines to approximate modified
       lines for the -m option.


SEE ALSO

       diff(1).


AUTHOR

       Thomas Dickey <dickey@invisible-island.net>.



                                                                   diffstat(1)

Mac OS X 10.9 - Generated Sat Oct 12 10:48:07 CDT 2013
© manpagez.com 2000-2024
Individual documents may contain additional copyright information.